Commissioner Jay Monahan and player directors Tiger Woods and Adam Scott are meeting with officials at the White House on Thursday as discussions for a PGA Tour-LIV Golf merger continue, sources tell ESPN.
Tiger Woods joined PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan and player director Adam Scott in a second White House meeting Thursday with President Donald Trump, another sign the sport is moving
PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan and the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia meet with President Trump to get a deal done.
Jay Monahan, Tiger Woods and Adam Scott are also expected to attend the meeting at the White House, sources briefed on the plans confirmed.
PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan, player directors Tiger Woods and Adam Scott, and PIF governor Yasir Al-Rumayyan met Thursday with President Trump.
Jay Monahan met with the media on Tuesday at Bay Hill Club to amplify the PGA Tour’s Fan Forward Initiative and extol the virtues of its latest move—a reduction in commercial time at this week’s Arnold Palmer Invitational that will be “repurposed” for more live golf that will focus on player-caddie interaction on NBC/Golf Channel
The PGA Tour commissioner met with reporters at Bay Hill and said "we're doing everything we can" but that no deal would be announced next week at the Players.
"The dynamic he brings is he's the leader of the free world and he has an active interest in reunifying the game," PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan said about Trump.
Things have slowly begun to progress between the PGA Tour and the PIF, but Jay Monahan isn't going to make any major announcement anytime soon.
PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan is confident stars will share the same stage again at big events such as the Arnold Palmer Invitational.
Those in the sport of golf are continuing to work toward the future of their game with the new administration in Washington D.C.. On Thursday, PGA Commissioner Jay Monahan along with Tiger Woods and Adam Scott are meeting with officials at the White House according to ESPN’s Mark Schlabach.